Friday, January 2, 2026

Winter Wetlands!

The Sutter Buttes from the Gray Lodge Wildlife Area

We had heavy rain over the past two weeks. In fact 14.31" fell in five days!!! Our total rainfall for the two weeks was 16.82", bringing our Water Year Total to 34.10", which is equivalent to more than half of our annual rainfall!!! There were a few breaks between storms, during which we managed to get to three different wetlands.

Gray Lodge Wildlife Area

The first one we visited was the Gray Lodge Wildlife Area, down in California's Central Valley. As you can see in the above photo, it was a foggy, overcast day. Surprisingly, we were the only visitors there! To our delight we walked the three mile loop with only birds for company! 
 
Snow Geese - Anser caerulescens

Probably the main reason that there were no other visitors there was the lack of Snow Geese in the wetlands. Usually there are thousands of them, but this year we only saw them fly overhead. None of them landed! They were headed south, so maybe they went down to the Sacramento Delta. I couldn't find any reasons for this change on the internet. We plan to revisit Gray Lodge later this month, and hope the Snow Geese will be here then. I'll keep you posted.

Great Egret - Ardea alba

The cloudy, gray, overcast created a soft even light over the whole preserve, making it super easy to get good wildlife photos! 
This scene of a Great Egret and an island of tules was particularly striking. Great Egrets are large, wading birds. They are 39" tall, with a wingspan of 51". In the shallow waters of Gray Lodge, they hunt for crustaceans, dragonflies, damselflies, giant water bugs, grasshoppers, frogs, tadpoles, birds, and fish.

Black-crowned Night Heron (adult) - Nycticorax nycticorax

We also saw several adult Black-crowned Night-Herons! The Cornell Lab of Ornithology states, on their website at https://birdsoftheworld.org/:

"Black-crowned Night-Herons are opportunists feeders that eat many kinds of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine animals. Their diet includes leeches, earthworms, insects, crayfish, clams, mussels, fish, amphibians, lizards, snakes, turtles, rodents, birds, and eggs. They also eat carrion, plant materials, and garbage from landfills. Rather than stabbing their prey, they grasp it in their bills. Black-crowned Night-Herons normally feed between evening and early morning, avoiding competition with other heron species that use the same habitat during the day. They may feed during the day in the breeding season, when they need extra energy for nesting."

Black-crowned Night Heron (juvenile) 
Nycticorax nycticorax

When I first spotted the stocky bird pictured above, I didn't know what it was. When I got home, I used iNaturalist.org to identify it, and found out it was a juvenile Black-crowned Night Heron!  How cool! I've never seen a juvenile before! Juvenile Black-crowned Night Herons don't get their adult feathers until there 2nd or 3rd year! The following information about this subject is from the website at https://www.heronconservation.org.

"Juveniles have brown plumage, very different from that of the adults (McVaugh 1972). The head and upper parts are grey brown with buff, white, or rufous spots. Lores are green and the irises are orange yellow to brown red, changing to red at 2-3 years. The stout bill is dark and horn. The upper bill is black with yellow or green sides, becoming black with green sides at one year. The lower bill is horn, turning yellow with horn tip or yellow green with black tip about 1 year, and black by 2 years. Upper wing is grey brown with lighter spots; flight feathers are grey brown with white tips. Upper tail coverts brown. Rump is grey brown streaked with white. Tail is grey. Under parts are grey with dark brown streaks. The legs are yellow green to olive green, turning yellow by 2 years. By the age of one year, the juvenile is still has a brown wash, brown cap and back, with some spots remaining and striped below (Davis 1999). Older juveniles (2-3 years) gradually take on adult characters, becoming more solidly dark above with the spots disappearing and lighter below, with some remnant brown feathers persisting on the head, back or wings."

Black-crowned Night Heron (juvenile) - Nycticorax nycticorax

This adult Black-crowned Night Heron was just across the pond from the adult pictured above. Adult male and female Black-crowned Night Herons are monomorphic (look the same). 

Green Heron (adult) - Butorides virescens

Every year we see Green Herons at Gray Lodge, and this year was not an exception! We came across several of them in the first section of the trail, walking around on the Parrot Feather plants!

Green Heron (adult) - Butorides virescens

As I watched this one adult, it quickly snapped up a frog from among the plants! Wow! Although fish are their primary food source, Green Herons also eat leeches; earthworms; aquatic and terrestrial insects such as adult and larval dragonflies, damselflies, waterbugs, diving beetles, grasshoppers, crickets, katydids ); spiders; crayfish, crabs, prawns; snails; frogs, toads, tadpoles, and newts; snakes and lizards; and rodents!!!

Pied-billed Grebe (adult) - Podylimbus podiceps

We also came across a Pied-billed Grebe holding a fish!!! I didn't recognize it because it was in its non-mating colors! Pied-billed Grebes eat crayfish, aquatic insects, leeches, frog, tadpoles and fish. This particular Grebe kept dropping and picking up the fish, again and again. Perhaps it was waiting for it to die!

Common Gallinule (adult) - Gallinula chloropus

There were lots of these Common Gallinules in the wetlands. Surprisingly seeds and snails are their most important foods! Commonly eats seeds of aquatic and terrestrial grasses, smartweeds, and pondweeds; duckweeds; flowers, seeds, and vegetative material of water lily; and seeds and vegetative material of various other aquatic plants. They also eat , beetles, true bugs, ants and wasps, true flies , spiders, crustaceans, dragonflies and damselflies, leeches, and moss animals!

Gray Lodge Wildlife Area

We reluctantly left in the late afternoon, when the clouds and sunlight were putting on a show, with plans to return soon! 

View north of Sierra Valley, from the vicinity of the Steel Bridge

Sierra Valley

The second wetland we visited Sierra Valley, which was absolutely beautiful with the recently fallen snow! Luckily for us the temperatures warmed up between storms, and the roads weren't snowy or icy and travel was easy and safe! Yay! We drove out to the Steel Bridge and saw some amazing wildlife!

Red-winged Blackbirds - Agelaius phoeniceus

On the way there we stopped and observed a large flock of Red-winged Blackbirds repeatedly perching on the barbed wire fencing, and then taking off all at once in a synchronized group! Just fabulous to watch!

Red-winged Blackbirds - Agelaius phoeniceus

I didn't know that they would stay in the Valley during the winter! In the winter they primarily eat seeds, and insects if available. Since the ground wasn't covered in snow, they were probably able to find enough seeds to eat. I imagine if the snow gets deep, they will migrate south to snow-free areas.

The Steel Bridge with a Bald Eagle Presiding!

As we drove up to the Steel Bridge I met two birders driving by. They stopped and said that there was a Bald Eagle on a telephone pole just before the Steel Bridge. So we walked down there, and sure enough the Bald Eagle was still there! WOW!!! We slowly approached it on the road, and were able to get some beautiful photos!

Bald Eagle - Haliaeeteus lucocephalus

Bald Eagles are BIG raptors! They are 31" in length, with a wingspan of 80"!!! When we got about 50 feet away from it, it took off to the south. Immediately another Bald Eagle flew up from the ground and joined this one!!! Together they flew off into the distance! Wow! What a beautiful sight! Bald Eagles mate for life, so this may have been a mated pair!!

Bald Eagles eat fish, waterfowl and water birds (Herons, Coots, etc), small mammals (Muskrats, Rabbits, Ground Squirrels), and carrion (large mammals). How lucky we were to see two Bald Eagles that day!

River Otter with fish in its mouth - Lontra canadensis

Another surprise sighting was a River Otter!  We were driving near the Steel Bridge when I spotted a River Otter with a large fish in its mouth swimming below us! We stopped the car, jumped out, and watched it swim to shore, haul the fish out of the water, and eat it!!! WOW!!! This incredible sighting probably lasted for five minutes or so! I have been to the Steel Bridge many, many  times over many years and have never seen a River Otter there! I was totally thrilled, and of course took a ton of photos!

River Otter hauling a fish out of the water - Lontra canadensis

River Otter positioning its captured fish - Lontra canadensis

River Otter eating a fish - Lontra canadensis

A video of the River Otter eating a fish!

River Otter heading out after eating most of its fish! 

It was so exciting to see this River Otter! How privileged we were watch it!!!

Northern Harrier (female) - Circus hudsonius

There were also several Northern Harriers skimming over the tops of the grasses, tules, and sagebrush, searching for prey. They are a medium size raptor, measuring 18" in length, with a wingspan of 43", and a weight of 15 oz. They eat medium to small birds and mammals, as well as reptiles and frogs. Unlike other raptors, they rely on auditory clues from their owl-like facial disc of feathers, which helps them locate prey acoustically! They can be found in Sierra Valley year-round.

Since it was 38 degrees we opted to eat lunch in our car. While we were there, a Northern Harrier flew down the road right towards us, and passed us at eye level just outside the car windows!!! I was in its usual hunting position, with its wings spread wide and its head looking down at the ground!!! It was amazing to see one so closely!! I'll never forget that sighting!!!

Northern Harrier (female) - Circus hudsonius

I didn't get a close-up photo of a Northern Harrier that day. The ones pictured above were taken on previous trips to Sierra Valley. The first one really shows the facial disc of feathers!  What beautiful raptors!

Northern Harrier pursuing Red-winged Blackbirds

From the Steel Bridge area we toured around Sierra Valley to the east before we reluctantly had to head home. It was truly an unforgettable day out in this beautiful, big-sky valley!  Hope we go back again soon!

The Sutter Buttes from the Marysville Rice Fields

The Marysville Rice Fields

The third wetlands we went to were the Marysville Rice Fields!  I'd been meaning to go there before the big rain storms, but didn't make it. So we went down a few days after all the storms. The fields were mainly full to the brim, and there weren't a lot of birds in them. We did luck out however, and saw quite a few Tundra Swans and some Greater White-fronted Geese!

Tundra Swans - Cygnus columbianus

Tundra Swans breed in the arctic and come down to California's Central Valley for the winter! These large swans have 7' wingspans, are about 4.5' tall, and can weigh up to 16 lbs.! Like Bald Eagles, they mate for life. When feeding, they do not dive, but submerge their heads to forage for the leaves, stems, seeds, and tubers of aquatic plants, such as rice. 

Tundra Swans couple with offspring - Cygnus columbianus

We saw several young swans in the company of their parents. Apparently they remain with their parents during their first year, and then associate to some degree for up to three more years.

Greater White-fronted Geese - Anser albifrons

Greater White-fronted Geese also migrate down from the arctic to spend the winter in the Central Valley. They feed on marsh grasses, sedges, berries, and seeds from agricultural crops. They are primarily diurnal feeders, and roost on wetlands at night. 

We usually also see White-faced Ibis, ducks, shorebirds, and raptors when we visit the rice fields, but not this year! Hopefully we'll check them again in the near future! 


What the heck is this?

What's happening on the River?

Check back in two weeks, on January 17th, for the answers to these questions and more!

Your questions and comments are greatly appreciated, please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thank you!

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Another Year!

Virginia Rail - Rallus limicola

Nine years ago, on December 23, 2016, I started this blog! Like last year, due to my husbands health, I wasn't able to get out and explore as much as usual. Whatever time I got outside was a gift! Each moment spent hiking, photographing, and observing nature was treasured. Birds, wildflowers, mammals, insects, and herptiles continued to amaze me! Clouds and their accompanying landscapes brought me much joy, over and over again. It was another great year, for which I am so grateful! Below are photo-composites of some of the incredible beauty that I was so privileged to see this year!

This year I had an astounding 59,064 hits (37,529 more than last year!!!) on my blog, from 90 different countries (20 more than last year)!!! Thanks go to all of you for your continued interest in my blog!

Landscapes: I am so lucky to have these extraordinary wild areas to explore!


Sunset looking west in Sierra Valley
View of the Sutter Buttes from the Spenceville Wildlife Area
Mount Elwell and Long Lake in the Lakes Basin
Howard Meadow in the Lakes Basin
Sunset looking east in Sierra Valley

Birds:  I find Bird Watching mesmerizing! I love seeing familiar birds return every year, as well encountering new species!  This year I was lucky to closely observe a Virginia Rail and a Sora in Sierra Valley! I have seen both of these birds before for fleeting moments, but this year they stayed in view for a minute or more!  I was also thrilled to see a Pileated Woodpecker in our neighborhood for the first time, as well as a small flock of Western Bluebirds bathing in a puddle!!! I was delighted to see a Common Merganser and her young on the river once again. They raise their young in our neighborhood every year!  Down in Gray Lodge we saw a juvenile Night-crowned Heron and Common Gallinules for the first time ever! The Gallinules were probably there before, but I had mis-identified them as coots!


Common Merganser (female) with ducklings
Sora (adult) - Rock Wren (adult)
Pileated Woodpecker (male) - Black-crowned Night Heron (juvenile)
Western Bluebirds bathing - (males & females)
White-faced Ibis (adult) - Marsh Wren (adult)
Wood Duck (female) - Common Gallinule (adult)
Black-crowned Night Heron (adult)

Mammals:  Mammals are never numerous in our area, so they are always a delight to see. This year I was astonished to see 11 Pronghorns in Sierra Valley. When we first came upon them they were reclining on the edge of an irrigated alfalfa field! It was a group of 10 females and 1 male, during mating season!!! I was also thrilled to see a Muskrat near the Steel Bridge! We also saw two Coyotes in the Spenceville Wildlife Preserve! Down in Gray Lodge Wildlife Area an Audubon's Cottontail and a Black-tailed Jackrabbit showed up briefly! In the Lakes Basin, a Marmot was sunning himself in a area where we have consistently seen one before! And in my neighborhood, I managed to see several Mule Deer, a young Black Bear, and a Gray Fox! Unfortunately, my cat caught a Trowbridge's Shrew, but it was a delight to look at.


Pronghorns - 1 male and 10 females
Trowbridge's Shrew (two views)
Coyote - Gray Fox
Yellow-bellied Marmot
Mule Deer (doe) - Muskrat
Audubon's Cottontail - Black-tailed Jackrabbit
Black Bear

Wildflowers: This year was dryer than the past two years, so the wildflower bloom wasn't as profuse. However, there were still lots and lots of wildflowers in the Lakes Basin, down at North Table Mountain Ecological Preserve, and in Sierra Valley. Bridgeport/South Yuba River State Park and the Spenceville Wildlife Area, were also carpeted in Spring blooms! Such beauty!


Sierra Primrose
Anderson's Thistle in bud - Showy Penstemon
Wild Azalea - Bitterroot
Crimson Columbine with inset of Anna's Hummingbird
Fireweed - Leopard Lily
Sierra Downingia - Alpine Shooting Star
Sky Lupine and Goldfields (in background)

Small Critters:  This year I've combined my insect and herptile sightings in one photo-composite. This year, on walks with my husband, I explored an area near our neighborhood many times in the winter. To my delight I came across an uncommon Sierra Ensatina there! These lovely, tiny salamanders are difficult to find, as they need a damp environment to survive, and are usually out of sight under dead tree bark, or duff on the forest floor! On North Table Mountain Ecological Preserve there was a large variety of pollen eating beetles! In the river, I was startled to see two Sacramento Suckers swimming along! In the Lakes Basin I encountered a Sierra Gartersnake for the first time ever! It's all amazing to me!


Two Common Checkered Clerid Beetles and one Blister Beetle 
Feather Millipede - Sierra Ensatina
Sierra Mountain Kingsnake
Sacramento Suckers
Sierra Gartersnake
Sierra Newt - Western Pond Turtle
Cucumber Beetle

I am so looking forward to another year of hiking and exploring our incredible natural world, and am SO grateful that I still CAN!

Check back in two weeks, on January 3rd, for my next blog post.
Happy Holidays and Best wishes for the New Year to all of you!

Winter Solstice


In Celebration of Winter's Beauty
and the passing of the Solstice!

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Too Busy to Blog!

Winter Alders and Willows - 12/09/25

I'm so sorry, but I just don't have the time to blog this weekend! I promise I'll post a new blog on Tuesday, December 23rd. It will feature my annual review of the past year, my ninth year! Thank you!
 

Sunday, November 30, 2025

A Few Mammals!

Black Bear - Ursus americanus

I don't often see large mammals in my neighborhood, but in the last month I've lucked out!  About a month ago I went for a late afternoon walk and came upon this young Black Bear in the woods! Surprisingly, it stared at me for a few minutes through a tangle of young cherry trees but didn't take off! It definitely was only a couple of years old and not an adult. I left after a few minutes, as I didn't want to alarm it. Half an hour later, I went back to the same sight and it was gone. This was the first bear I've see all year!  

Black Bear - Ursus americanus

I think this Black Bear was a youngish bear because of its size and behavior. It wasn't aggressive at all, and more curious than an adult would be. The following information about bear cub behavior is from two different websites.

https://wildlife.ca.gov/Conservation/Mammals/Black-Bear
"Cubs will follow their mother everywhere she goes, learning from everything she does, including how and where to find food, what food sources are safe, what is dangerous and to be avoided. Unruly cubs are often disciplined by their mother's growling, grunting, and swats. Mothers may carry their cubs in difficult or steep terrain when they are small. Upon independence, cubs will disperse to find new home ranges to settle in."

https://bear.org/bear-facts/family-breakup
"[Black Bear] Family bonds remain strong right up to the day of family breakup. In the days before family breakup, they play together, groom each other, sleep together, and suckle. Like human youngsters, yearling bears sleep very soundly, trusting their safety to the alertness of their mother.

Family breakup happens suddenly during mating season in May or June when the mother is nearly ready to mate.

The sudden presence of a male can precipitate family breakup. At first, the mother is torn between her yearlings and the persistent male, but within a day after family breakup, she will chase her yearlings away whenever she encounters them.

Littermates also separate from each other. Each settles in a separate area within its mother’s territory. The mother then avoids those areas, giving the yearlings nearly exclusive feeding rights.

Without their mothers, the yearlings are initially skittish, spending long periods up trees. They become covered with ticks. By the end of the summer, they develop into confident little bears.

Most sons voluntarily leave within a couple years after family breakup. Most daughters eventually establish territories in or near their mother’s territory."

Columbian Black-tailed Mule Deer (doe) - Odocoileus hemionus columbianus

For the past five mornings, I've seen two Mule Deer does eating the rotten apples in our yard!  The apples have been on the ground for more than a month, but I've only seen a few bear scats full of apple chunks in the area. Usually, the bears eat them all up, this year they didn't. They did, however, eat about 300 pears off of our pear tree as well as a ton of wild domestic grapes!

Columbian Black-tailed Mule Deer (doe) - Odocoileus hemionus columbianus

I really enjoyed watching them every morning. Sometimes they were eating in the pouring rain! Female Mule Deer usually travel in multigenerational family groups of related females, and their offspring. Bucks older than yearlings will often leave their family groups and travel independently or in small groups with other bucks.

Grey Fox - Urocyon cinereoargenteus

To my delight I briefly saw a Gray Fox a few weeks ago! These beautiful animals live here year-round, but I haven't seen one in a long time! I have written about them a bunch in my previous blogs. You can search for the blogs that they are featured in, by typing in "Gray Fox" in the search bar on the top right of my home page.

Muskrat - Ondatra zibethicus

An Evening in Sierra Valley!

Last week we went over to Sierra Valley for a dinner picnic at the Steel Bridge! It was an absolutely beautiful evening with clouds and shadows racing over the snowy peaks and valley floor. The light changed so fast that it was exciting to watch! Shaded ridges would be suddenly lit-up by low sunlight piercing through the clouds. It was enchanting! It was also COLD! My friends dropped me off so I could walk, photograph, and observe the changing beauty, while they watched from the warmth of the car! What a gift it was to be out there surrounded by such beauty!!!

To my absolute delight a Muskrat appeared in one of the ponds off the road! I quickly snapped a photo, and then it dove underwater and didn't resurface. I haven't seen a muskrat here for four years! I was thrilled!!! 

These aquatic mammals measure 12.5" in length, with a 9.5" tail, and a weight of 24-63 oz! They live in swamps, marshes, and wetlands in large family groups. Marshes where the water level remains constant are their preference. They are proficient swimmers, can stay underwater for 12-17 minutes, and have partially webbed hind feet! Their fur is thick and traps air, which provides insulation and adds buoyancy! The roots of aquatic plants, and other vegetation is their main diet. They eat one third of their weight daily! Burrows are dug in the banks of wetlands, to stay in during the heat of the day as well as at night. Nests are built out of piles of vegetation on a base, such as a tree stump, typically surrounded by water. What amazing little critters these are!

Northern Harrier (male) - Circus hudsonius

Before the sun went down, we were thrilled to watch a Northern Harrier hunting nearby! It flew over the grass for quite awhile, with it's head tilted down to the ground looking for prey. It was identifiable as a male by its gray and white feathering. Females are overall brownish in color, with a streaky brown and white breast. Northern Harriers typically fly low, skimming over the grasses, tules, and sagebrush while hunting for prey. They are a medium size raptor, measuring 18" in length, with a wingspan of 43", and a weight of 15 oz. They eat medium to small birds and mammals, as well as reptiles and frogs. Unlike other raptors, they rely on auditory clues from their owl-like facial disc of feathers, which helps them locate prey acoustically! They can be found in Sierra Valley year-round.

Sierra Valley to the east

Here is a selection of photos that I took that evening. Hope you enjoy them!

The same view a minute later!

A wider view from farther away!

A similar view 10 minutes later!

An eastern ridge, lit up by the sunset!

The last of the light!


What's happening in the Marysville Rice Fields?

What does the Ramshorn Trail look like this year?

What's happening in the foothills?

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog every TWO weeks. Check back on December 13th for my next natural history blog.

Your questions and comments are always appreciated! Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!